advertisement
On The Insider: Brooke Hogan to Pose for Playboy?
Find Articles in:
all
Business
Reference
Technology
News
Sports
Health
Autos
Arts
Home & Garden
advertisement

Content provided in partnership with
Thomson / Gale

Not Under My Roof - Interview

E: The Environmental Magazine,  Sept, 2001  by J.B.

Olivia Newton-John, Kelly Preston and Nancy Chuda Speak Out for Children

After her five-year-old daughter, Colette, died from a non-hereditary form of childhood cancer, Nancy Chuda knew something in the environment was terribly wrong (see "What Killed Colette Chuda," cover story, May/June 1995). Personal experience has taught celebrity mothers Olivia Newton-John and Kelly Preston the same, and they have since become eloquent spokespeople for the Children's Health Environmental Coalition (CHEC), which Chuda co-founded 10 years ago. In CHEC's new video Not Under My Roof, Newton-John and Preston illustrate simple ways to child-proof a home against invisible environmental toxins. When the three mothers spoke with E in May, they were on their way to share the video with another influential group of parents--those elected to Capitol Hill.

Most Popular Articles in News
The Ten Best Laptop bags
Tata plans cheapest-ever car for Indian market
GLOBALIZATION AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF UNDERDEVELOPMENT OF THE THIRD WORLD
Corn is good for you; Corn is not only a tasty treat, but also a cereal that ...
THE 50 BEST STYLISH HANDBAGS TO CARRY
More »
advertisement

E: In the video, there are a lot of scenes of children playing, putting their hands in their mouths and running barefoot across the lawn.

CHUDA: A small child is terrestrial and tactile. They're mouthing, feeling and experimenting. Therefore, they're inadvertently being exposed to invisible bullets.

PRESTON: Their bodies are so much smaller, and they're breathing at much more frequent rates. Pound for pound, whether they're palming something or inhaling, they're taking in far more chemicals than adults do. And it's far more dangerous.

Kelly, do you watch your daughter, Ella Bleu, crawling on the floor and think about those things?

P: Absolutely! Everything goes into her mouth. We have a nontoxic home. We don't use any chemicals or pesticides, and we didn't use any harmful materials when renovating our house. When I'm somewhere that I can't control, it scares me.

Have you always felt that way?

P: I have another child, Jett, and I didn't think that way before I had him. When he was two years old, he became very ill. We almost lost him because of the off-gassing of carpet chemicals. We thought we were making a safe environment for him by having our home cleaned, but it was actually far more dangerous.

NEWTON-JOHN: When you have a new baby, your instinct is to clean and spruce up the carpet and paint the walls. If something smells clean, people think it must be clean. Actually, that smell is chemical, and it can be very toxic to a child.

How important is it for the average person to serve organic food and use nontoxic cleaners to help protect children's health?

P: Look at the statistics. Cancer has risen even among adults: lymphoma, brain cancer, testicular and ovarian cancer. Something's happening--it's not all hereditary.

C: This is not being overprotective or too cautious. Once a grassroots wave starts to permeate, you're going to see corporate America stand up and pay attention. You'll see major manufacturing companies with greener and safer products. But that can only happen through education.

Do you feel that hearing the issue from a celebrity gives it more credibility?

N-J: We hope so, but it doesn't matter. The main thing is that it gets our foot in the door so people will listen. We're mothers, we're concerned about our children, and we want to help other people protect their children.

P: We're really mothers who happen to be celebrities who are telling the truth. And if that does open a door, then great.

N-J: In protecting our children, we're protecting ourselves. The whole planet is a living, breathing entity with animals and plants that we also have to think of. If we can stop this madness now, then maybe by the time our children grow up, we can help heal it somehow.

How can people start this process?

P: You can start in your home and become a good example. Protect your own children and then help your friends, relatives and community organizations. It has a wonderful ripple effect.

N-J: Start training your children when they're young to think before they act, which is what we should all be doing.

What kind of impact do you hope this video has on Congress?

C: If our elected representatives don't understand this issue, then they can't best represent their constituencies, and we'll never see laws that are going to protect the most vulnerable--children, the elderly and pregnant women. Some have declined to attend our presentation based on the principles of the campaign, and I'm concerned about that--I don't understand how they could argue this issue.

Do you think there's anything controversial in the video that people wouldn't agree with?

P: Not unless you are in the pocket of a chemical company.

C: President Bush has an incredibly sordid past. He comes from the state of Texas, one of the most polluted states in the nation. He helped create the pollution--as governor, he was in business with the polluting industries. And he took that mentality to Washington. He doesn't want to see that children are at risk. It's going to take the power of the public to influence individual members of Congress and the President. That's what CHEC is trying to do.

Nancy, do you feel that Colette's message is being heard?